ABSTRACT

Written during the Second World War against the background of the economic and political futility of the 1930s, this book deals with the changing role of government, and particularly fiscal policy as an instrument for regulating the national income and its distribution. Arguing that the war had an economic basis - the inability of the great industrial nations to provide full employment at rising standards of real income - the book discusses how the failure to achieve a world order in the political sphere must be sought in the facts of economic frustration.

part One|95 pages

Toward an Understanding of The Thirties

chapter Chapter II|18 pages

Investment and Consumption, 1920–1939

chapter Chapter III|17 pages

Monetary Policy in The Depression

chapter Chapter IV|13 pages

Fiscal Policy in The Recovery

chapter Chapter V|10 pages

Recovery in Great Britain

part Two|116 pages

The Changing Role of Fiscal Policy

chapter Chapter VI|9 pages

Fiscal Policy, New and Old

chapter Chapter VIII|10 pages

The Tax Structure

chapter Chapter IX|51 pages

The Growth and Role of Public Debt

chapter Chapter X|37 pages

Budgetary Theory and Practice

part Three|116 pages

Fiscal Policy and Full Use of Resources

chapter Chapter XI|36 pages

The Cyclical Consumption-Income Pattern

chapter Chapter XII|28 pages

Pump-Priming and Compensatory Fiscal Policy

chapter Chapter XIII|12 pages

Compensatory Tax Policy

chapter Chapter XIV|12 pages

The Dynamic Versus The Circular Flow Economy

part Four|72 pages

Investment Incentives Past and Present

chapter Chapter XVII|17 pages

Extensive and Intensive Expansion

chapter Chapter XVIII|17 pages

Early Financing Methods

chapter Chapter XX|11 pages

The Dual Economy

part Five|46 pages

Defense and Its Aftermath

chapter Chapter XXI|11 pages

Monetary and Fiscal Controls in Wartime

chapter Chapter XXII|15 pages

Defense Financing

chapter Chapter XXIII|10 pages

The Postdefense Slump

chapter Chapter XXIV|8 pages

Fiscal Policy and International Stability